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Indian Viswanathan anand won World Chess Championship 2012

alok mishra

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Viswanathan Anand successfully defended his world title in Moscow after winning the second game of the tie-breaker in the World Chess Championship against Boris Gelfand.

Anand took the lead in the tie-breaker after winning the second game following a draw in the first. The Indian chess great then held his Israeli opponent to draws in the third and the fourth game to clinch his fifth world title.

The two players were forced to duel it out in the rapid chess tie-breaker after a tied 6-6 result in the World Chess Championship regular matches.
Anand has previously won the title in 2000, 2007, 2008 and 2010.

He held the FIDE World Chess Championship from 2000 to 2002, at a time when the world title was split. In 2007, Anand became the undisputed World Champion. In 2008, he defended his title against Vladimir Kramnik. He successfully his title, which was also his fourth title, when he beat Veselin Topalov in the last of their 12-game duel.

This year again, Anand was stretched to the tie-breaker with ten drawn matches out of 12 against Gelfand. The two players managed to win a game each.

Born on December 11, 1969 to Viswanathan and Susheela, Anand was highly influenced by his mother, who played a vital role in focusing his interest towards chess as well as shaping his career in this sport.

Anand first tasted success at the age of 14 in 1983-84, when he set a new record by scoring 9/9 points. Next year, he earned the title of International Master and he was the youngest Asian to have ever received that title. In 1985, he was given the Arjuna Award for the most outstanding Indian sportsman of the year.

After taking the junior circuit by storm, Anand soon graduated to the next level. In 1987, he became India's first Grandmaster and the youngest Grandmaster in the World at that time.

At the young age of 18, the Government of India awarded him the Padma Sri.

The 1990s were extremely successful for Anand and he made his mark in the game. He became the first Indian to qualify for Candidates Matches leading up to the World Championships in 1990.

In 1991, Anand won his first major International Chess Tournament, finishing ahead of world champion Garry Kasparov and former world champion Anatoly Karpov.

In 1991-92, he became the first recipient of India's highest sporting honour, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award.

Winning the Alekhine Memorial chess tournament in 1992 and the PCA Interzonal title, the strongest Swiss tournament in 1993, are some of his other major achievements in the early nineties.

In 1994-95, 'Vishy', as his friends and family call him, dominated the qualifying cycles for the FIDE and PCA world championships. In 1997 and 1998 consecutively, Anand won the Chess Oscar, an award given to the best chess player of the year chosen by leading chess critics, writers, and journalists conducted by the Russian chess magazine 64. He won the award again in 2003, 2004, 2007 and 2008.

In 1996, he won the prestigious Dortmund Tournament jointly with Valdimir Kramnik. In the same year he beat world champion Garry Kasparov in the Swiss rapid Grand Prix final to win the title.

In 1998, Anand won Torneo International De Ajedrez, Linares, the strongest tournament in the history of chess and moved to World No. 2 position. This year, he was also given the Sportstar Millennium Award, from India's premier Sports magazine for 'The Sportsperson of the Millennium'.

The new millennium heralded a series of bigger achievements. After a string of victories, came the bigger one when he won the FIDE World Championships by beating Alexei Shirov in the Final.

Anand, who was awarded with the Padma Bhushan award, successfully defended his World Cup title in 2002.

In 2007, Anand became the World Champion for the second time. He won the double round-robin tournament with a final score of 9 out of 14 points, a full point ahead of joint second place finishers Vladimir Kramnik and Boris Gelfand. Earlier that year, Anand took an early lead at Morelia-Linares Super Grandmaster Chess Tournament and stayed there right up to a final draw with Vassily Ivanchuk. He took the title at Linares for the first time since 1998 and also took the FIDE World No.1 Ranking for the very first time ever.

In 2008, he won three big events. He defended his Morelia Linares title by defeating Topalov. His next win came in 13th Grenkeleasing Rapid World Chess Championship at Mainz where he beat Magnus Carslen. He has won the Mainz Tournament 11 times in its 13 years of existence and the last 9 times in a row. But the biggest one was towards the end of the year when he defeated rival Kramnik 6.5-4.5 in a match to retain the unified World Champion Title and achieve it in an unprecedented third different format.

In 2008 the Government of India awarded him the Padma Vibhushan, the second highest civilian award, for his World Championship Title and No.1 World Ranking.

http://sports.ndtv.com/othersports/chess/item/190976-live-viswanathan-anand-leads-against-boris-gelfand-in-world-chess-championship
 
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actually Anand deserve "bharat ratna" more than sachin.

how many of you think like me ?

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actually Anand deserve "bharat ratna" more than sachin.

how many of you think like me ?

Wouldn't like to compare, but although Sachin has achieved a lot for India, he has also gotten more than his share of appreciation over the years. I think we should pass a law that all civilian honors should be for non-cricketers only :) They already have money and fame!
 
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All three have tremendous fans , all three Sachin,Vishy,Dhyanchand deserve Bhratratna.

So it's better to give none of them because its insulting other player.
 
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Wouldn't like to compare, but although Sachin has achieved a lot for India, he has also gotten more than his share of appreciation over the years. I think we should pass a law that all civilian honors should be for non-cricketers only :) They already have money and fame!


Whether Sachin achieved a lot for India or for himself is debatable. I started hating him after his Ferrari tax fiasco. He doesn't deserve Bharat Ratna.

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Vishy definitely deserves Bharat Ratna
 
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One Man. One Game. Silent performer. True Class.

Chess needs brains of the highest calibre.

Thanks Vishy for keeping the Indian flag flying high all these years.

Hats off ! :tup:
 
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